As someone who has been triggered in some very uncomfortable circumstances, I would prefer even trade paperbacks to come with warnings, much less fanfiction. I've put books down and never returned to them when I realized where the story was going and have even avoided reading sequels that refered to the triggering event. I had a near meltdown at work one time listening to an audiobook that didn't have a warning. It's not pleasant to be put through these things and, while I don't demand that warnings be given, it is something I would really, really like to see happen.
'A Hole in the World'
Spike's Bitches 44: It's about the rules having changed.
[NAFDA] Spike-centric discussion. Lusty, lewd (only occasionally crude), risqué (and frisqué), bawdy (Oh, lawdy!), flirty ('cuz we're purty), raunchy talk inside. Caveat lector.
Well, it would be good if there was someplace to ask. There are lots of books out there. skipping the ones with triggering events -- seems good.
if there was someplace to ask.
That's a thought. An online archive where people can post the warnings. That way, it's not on the book cover, in the introduction, summary, whatever, but it is available for those who really care to know.
There are lots of books out there. skipping the ones with triggering events -- seems good.
With respect to books, this is generally where I have to say that amazon reviews have their purpose. Many of the people who review on their will give away telling incidents in books or at the very least, give fair warning.
Or the amazon book forums, useless as they generally are, can actually provide a fair amount of help with something like this.
But then again, if I had a trigger issue, I wouldn't have any problems asking - is there a raoe scene , or child abuse seen in the work. Even for a published books -- why risk it?
right, it is the reader's responsibility to ask, not the author's to warn.
Has anyone seriously suggested putting ratings on books? I think I remember some publisher doing ratings, but I think it was limited to YA books.
Has anyone seriously suggested putting ratings on books?
Whenever Publisher's Weekly or Booklist review children's books, they put a recommended grade range. Amazon and B&N have them as well. In terms of an actual hard and fast rating, that has tended to fail like the coyote trying to catch the road runner. It's proven too difficult to come up with hard and fast guidelines that publishers would be willing to adhere to.
Has anyone seriously suggested putting ratings on books?
I think they'd get into the same issue as happened with music. It just takes one dominant retailer (like Wal-Mart) to insist on "clean" content and then suddenly Are You There God, It's Me Margaret? is de facto banned.
right, it is the reader's responsibility to ask, not the author's to warn.
I don't agree with this. But there are obviously many POVs about this issue, so not everyone is going to agree.
It just takes one dominant retailer (like Wal-Mart) to insist on "clean" content and then suddenly Are You There God, It's Me Margaret? is de facto banned.
As it is, with Wal-Mart being the single largest book retailer right now, it's hard for some publishers to get their books carried, simply because of the covers, let alone the content.
Freakin' Wal-Mart.
Tep, I see where you're coming from, but at the same time, I'm always going to fall on the side that a writer can't allow the outside world and its potential concerns to intrude when writing. However, once that's said and done, I see no reason a writer couldn't take a step back, look at their work and say, "Hmm... there are some potentially disturbing things here, if people ask, I'm going to be open about it." Of course, that depends upon how much of the plot hinges on the disturbing material or event.
It's a catch-22 and as individual as every story.